8 research outputs found

    Reactivity of alpha 1-antitrypsin mutants against proteolytic enzymes of the kallikrein-kinin, complement, and fibrinolytic systems.

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    Increased extracellular proteolysis because of unregulated activation of blood coagulation, complement, and fibrinolysis is observed in thrombosis, shock, and inflammation. In the present study, we have examined whether the plasma kallikrein-kinin system, the classical pathway of complement, and the fibrinolytic system could be inhibited by alpha 1-antitrypsin reactive site mutants. Wild-type alpha 1-antitrypsin contains a Met residue at P1 (position 358), the central position of the reactive center. It did not inhibit plasma kallikrein, beta-factor XIIa, plasmin, tissue-type plasminogen activator (t-PA), or urokinase. In contrast, these serine proteases were inhibited by alpha 1-antitrypsin Arg358. For the inhibition of C1s, a double mutant having Arg358 and a Pro----Ala mutation at P2 (position 357) was required. This double modification was made because C1-inhibitor, the natural inhibitor of C1s, has Arg and Ala residues at positions P1 and P2. Plasminogen activator inhibitor 1, the natural inhibitor of t-PA, also has Arg and Ala residues at positions P1 and P2. In a purified system, alpha 1-antitrypsin Ala357-Arg358 was 150-fold less efficient against C1s than C1-inhibitor and 27,000-fold less efficient against t-PA than plasminogen activator inhibitor-1. In plasma, 2.3 microM alpha 1-antitrypsin Ala357-Arg358 reduced by 65% the formation of a complex between kallikrein and C1-inhibitor following activation of the intrinsic pathway of blood coagulation by kaolin. Furthermore, after supplementation by 2.0 microM alpha 1-antitrypsin Ala357-Arg358, zymographic analysis showed that the majority of the free t-PA of normal plasma formed a bimolecular complex with the double mutant. In contrast, 3.4 microM alpha 1-antitrypsin Ala357-Arg358 did not prevent the activation of the classical pathway of complement observed when normal serum is supplemented with anti-C1-inhibitor F(ab')2 fragment. These results demonstrate that alpha 1-antitrypsin Ala357-Arg358 has therapeutic potential for disorders with unregulated activation of the intrinsic pathway of blood coagulation and the fibrinolytic system; however, the double mutant is not an efficient inhibitor for the classical pathway of complement

    Substrate properties of C1 inhibitor Ma (alanine 434----glutamic acid). Genetic and structural evidence suggesting that the P12-region contains critical determinants of serine protease inhibitor/substrate status.

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    The serine protease inhibitor (serpin) C1 inhibitor inactivates enzymes involved in the regulation of vascular permeability. A patient from the Ma family with the genetic disorder hereditary angioedema inherited a dysfunctional C1 inhibitor allele. Relative to normal plasma, the patients's plasma contained an additional C1 inhibitor immunoreactive band, which comigrated with normal C1 inhibitor cleaved by plasma kallikrein, C1s, or factor XIIa. C1 inhibitor Ma did not react with a monoclonal antibody to a neoepitope that is present in complexed and cleaved normal C1 inhibitor, suggesting conformational differences between cleaved normal C1- inhibitor and cleaved C1 inhibitor Ma. Molecular cloning and sequencing of exon 8 of the C1 inhibitor Ma allele revealed a single C to A mutation, changing alanine 434 to glutamic acid. Ala 434 of C1 inhibitor aligns with the P12 residue of the prototypical serpin alpha 1-antitrypsin. The P12 amino acid of all inhibitory serpins is alanine, and it is present in a highly conserved region on the amino-terminal side of the serpin-reactive center loop. Whereas normal C1 inhibitor expressed by transfected COS-1 cells formed complexes with and was cleaved by kallikrein, fXIIa, and C1s, COS-1-expressed Ala434---Glu C1 inhibitor was cleaved by these enzymes but did not form complexes with them. These results, together with evidence from other studies, suggest that serpin protease inhibitor activity is the result of protein conformational change that occurs when the P12 region of a serpin moves from a surface location, on the reactive site loop of the native molecule, to an internal location within sheet A of the complexed inhibitor
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